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You don’t always need an address to find the Friel House. Just
follow the music.
A short walk from campus, a group of music-minded students have
found a home on C Street. The house looks small from the curb, but
its three stories shelter seven students, and still have room for a
formal dining room, a large kitchen with a breakfast nook, a living
room, and a library.
The house is named for the Friel family, and for 54 years was
home to Washington State University basketball coach Jack Friel and
his wife, Catherine.
Catherine Friel died in 2003. Last year, her family agreed to
sell the College Hill property to the University, furthering the
school’s plans to offer theme housing for students in the
neighborhood. “She would have loved it,” says attorney Wally Friel,
the son who lived in the house from 1942 until he married in 1954.
The family was most concerned that “some slum lord would buy it and
put 30 college kids in it.” That it has become a resource for WSU
is even better, he says.
The school invested about $400,000 to buy the property and
update it with new windows, neutral paint, carpet, new bathroom
fixtures, and fire protection. But in a way, Mrs. Friel and her
family still inhabit the house.
To get to her room at the back of the house, Nola Swanson had to
wander between a strawberry-colored couch and an orange sherbet
chair in the Friel living room. “This is better,” says the graduate
music student, gesturing to the bright pieces. “When we first saw
it, the whole house was pink.” It was one of Mrs. Friel’s favorite
colors, she says.
Despite the rosy hue of it all, Swanson loved the place, the
size of it, the full kitchen where she and her housemates could
bake cookies, the bedroom off the kitchen furnished with the Friel
family antiques, and that she was hand-selected to live there. “But
the fact that I would be living with music students, that was the
biggest draw,” she says.
Swanson was picked by Gerald Berthiaume, the director of WSU’s
School of Music and Theater Arts. Carefully selecting the students
is key to the house’s success, he says. He wants tenants who will
respect the old house and its furnishings, but he also wants to
provide roommates who will stimulate one another’s musical
interests.
So far, it seems to be working. Several of the students invited
friends and family over for dinners on Mrs. Friel’s china and
entertained them with impromptu recitals at the Steinway, which
belonged to Mrs. Friel’s mother.
Chris Wang was the first student to move into the master bedroom
on the top floor. For $339 a month he had an old four-poster bed, a
walk-in closet, and a great view to the north. He devoted hours
this spring to cataloguing the books left behind by the family, a
task which prompted him to learn more about each member. Knowing
whose house it was enriched his time living there. “I liked
everything about this house,” he says. “What a great way to spend
my senior year.”
—Hannelore Sudermann
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